Albuquerque Journal

Top business issues to watch in 2019

- BY JOYCE M. ROSENBERG

NEW YORK — Smallbusin­ess issues often win bipartisan support on Capitol Hill, but given the divisions in the incoming 116th Congress, advocates for companies have low expectatio­ns.

Even after lawmakers deal with the partial government shutdown, a Democratic House, a Republican Senate and ongoing investigat­ions of the Trump White House and campaign are expected to be obstacles to much small-businessre­lated work getting done.

“I think 2019 is going to be a quiet year with maybe small reforms on tax things, maybe some trade legislatio­n getting through,” said Karen Kerrigan, president of the Small Business & Entreprene­urship Council.

Company owners may see more movement in their states, said John Arensmeyer, CEO of Small Business Majority, who called governors “more aggressive than anyone” on helping small business.

A look at issues that smallbusin­ess advocates expect to be on government agendas in 2019:

HEALTH CARE: Lawmakers were expected to introduce health care bills even before the federal court ruling last month that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitu­tional. Since that ruling, which is expected to be appealed and could reach the Supreme Court, House Democrats have said they plan to intervene in defense of the law.

Democrats expect to introduce bills to limit the use of low-cost short-term health plans that have limited coverage, and bolster the ACA’s coverage of people with preexistin­g conditions. Republican opposition to Democratic efforts is likely, although many GOP lawmakers voiced support for pre-existing condition coverage during their election campaigns.

Small-business groups want Congress to pass legislatio­n limiting increases in health care costs — but they’re not optimistic.

“To do that would be controvers­ial,” said Todd McCracken, president of the National Small Business Associatio­n.

Legislatio­n expanding the availabili­ty of associatio­n health plans, or AHPs, stalled in the 115th Congress and could be reintroduc­ed. These plans allow individual­s such as sole proprietor­s to band together and buy insurance. They’re illegal under the ACA, but the Trump administra­tion last year issued

rules making it possible for some owners to join AHPs. However, some states have laws making it difficult or impossible for their residents to join the plans, and more states might enact their own legislatio­n.

Changes in health care law are most likely to come from the states, Arensmeyer said.

TAXES: Legislatio­n to simplify tax code provisions that affect small businesses languished in the last Congress and is expected to be reintroduc­ed. Among other things, the Small Business Owners’ Tax Simplifica­tion Act would make due dates for estimated tax payments the last date of calendar year quarters. It would also make it easier for owners to deduct their own health care premiums.

“They’re common sense reforms that are supported by both sides of the aisle,” Kerrigan says.

Some business groups will seek further tax code simplifica­tion because of the administra­tive burden taxes place on owners. But hopes aren’t high.

TRADE: Congress is expected to consider the U.S. Mexico Canada Agreement early in 2019. The trade deal, intended to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, is opposed by Democrats who want stronger protection­s for U.S. workers from low-wage Mexican competitio­n.

Many U.S. small manufactur­ers export to Mexico and Canada and want the deal ratified.

“It’s bad for business, particular­ly for small businesses, if the agreement just went away,” McCracken said.

EMPLOYMENT ISSUES: The Labor Department is expected to issue its new regulation­s on overtime — which employees must be given overtime, and which are exempt. The Trump administra­tion is rewriting rules written under the Obama administra­tion and then blocked by a federal judge; those rules would have doubled the pay threshold at which workers would be exempt from overtime, to $47,476 from $23,660. An estimated 4.2 million people would have been able to begin earning OT under the rules.

Kerrigan expects the rules to be issued early in the year and predicted the threshold would be a compromise between the Obama administra­tion version and no increase.

INFRASTRUC­TURE: Legislatio­n to repair the nation’s roadways and bridges is expected in the new Congress although the Trump administra­tion $1.5 billion proposal announced last February foundered. McCracken says the parties remain too far apart for a bill to pass — unless the economy provides some motivation for a compromise.

“Infrastruc­ture is one of those things that can generate a lot of activity and bolster the economy,” he says. Many companies that do the actual repairing of roads and bridges are small businesses, such as general contractor­s.

INTERNET PRIVACY: Laws aimed at protecting consumers’ privacy and personal informatio­n are expected to be pursued in state legislatur­es, and possibly in Congress, after California’s passage last year of its Consumer Privacy Protection Act. The law, which takes effect Jan. 1, 2020, requires businesses to disclose how they use personal informatio­n and gives consumers more control over how that informatio­n is used.

The prospect of businesses having to comply with 50 different laws has some members of Congress in favor of creating a national standard.

PAID LEAVE: Legislatio­n is expected in more states providing for paid sick leave and family leave for employees. Twelve states and 20 cities and counties have sick leave laws, which allow employees to accrue paid time off for their illnesses or a family member’s. Paid family leave, including time off to care for ill relatives, is the law only in California, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island; those states have employee and/or employer-funded insurance pools to partially replace workers’ wages.

Democrats in the House may also introduce family leave legislatio­n, but it likely wouldn’t survive the Senate, McCracken said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A U.S .Coast Guard vessel patrols the Oakland estuary as the container ship Horizon Enterprise is unloaded at the Port of Oakland in California. Congress is expected to consider the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement early in 2019. The trade deal, intended to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, is opposed by Democrats who want it to have stronger protection­s for U.S. workers from low-wage Mexican competitio­n.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A U.S .Coast Guard vessel patrols the Oakland estuary as the container ship Horizon Enterprise is unloaded at the Port of Oakland in California. Congress is expected to consider the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement early in 2019. The trade deal, intended to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, is opposed by Democrats who want it to have stronger protection­s for U.S. workers from low-wage Mexican competitio­n.

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